Yl ul ~` - -=-fr -.,._... ' Aga: _" /,rf .1 "“=: -iagfao -_ =.=;,-3.# .. ,,.__.-_a.».t Eh if ‘t"2 jtljfi .1 " “ti-".‘:» `-lf;-ii =‘. $.51: ?.-?g;i_i._. `3.='1:'-`--.' --1. ;,>». is ..._ K. ?!~.~, i_ ’_i_ fi.- . :’ :gi- pit. . ity" ‘ i __'»f¢.‘S‘ ‘ft "5 .= =§`<;-.2 ffi ’~' ‘ tent, . ,,- l§'¥ \..-/.- - .1-.. _ »,-,1~.. f t ,-_',,»i ‘-its-1 f.'t.t%:if1‘ ` Ill lg i iii ‘ ' t, ,,__. 'iii-fi.~» . .. ,- _._ -‘.617 , _ -if.-f _ 1 ._ -_j._." i T' i. ;»f.‘_-iii' li ,- t f._.:t t`- ff' lit - ,‘ t` . i. :"- i1"; t ‘iw-2 ii* - t -Vt it ifi 1;. _ iii' ill.-‘sy " . ,_ t = .;; t' t‘ " . :r _-W 1, .E ._._-. "l » i 'l if A i i Z. if ._ _ 'i' t i . l ,-'iii ._ ____ iiigi 1'5"’ in .__ Z. if -1 ’-if t - ily- .LM ff ‘J vi' ,i -1 1 .-‘ a. Ev' -.7 if tt- ,i "4 PXGE Form - THE cHARLoT'rE'rowN Gulinnmu . ' i SEPTEMBER 16. 1914. j Tearing Your Hair With a rough tooth comb will not only spoil the smooth appearance of ' your hair, but is liable to injure the scalp. It will pay you to discard such a . it t. THE GUARD! Advertising Phone ..132-3 i Subscription Phone ..132-2 Date Day _._`_._. ‘ Atherton. Souric and Montague. t I q~,,_ 044; 10 K, Stand W. C. ' 1 Th_ 1_33 T. President ..A. A. Bartlett S_ 2_55 | - Managing Editor .. R. Bu-'neff l M 3,39 SEPTEMBER. Hlgh Water Time H't Time AN H't .Q an 21.19 22.11 22.51 23.24 23.54 ewn and Edit. Day Phone .. .....133 ew; ami Edii.Ni¢mPn°n¢¢iaz stiss ||v$‘;,_| I |'rti. 9.24 l l |F. 10.21 | sn. | 11.10 ‘ s 4mm»wNH w@””Hw< m~“°4mL eseeowsww H h-ll-‘U\V§@ O ."'."." oiihza Head Office at Charlottetown _ 1154 - ranch .Offices ..at ..Summers|de, I M_ 0_3 1134 13.11 13.47 14.24 . 1.57 15.04 _ I Sa. 2.24 15.57 17.10 18.30 19.42 HNHFHWFH I-°b&ihUl¢¢~l>~lC¢ London Office, Marconi House, |Wed_ 1_ F i-li-i-use islbimv-Owen A 1 Tu. 4.45 comb. You’ll find plenty of good 20.38 21.24 22.03 22.40 .".".°"F‘ oocicwow -:_-171 oc-at-° | ru. 1.39 1.’ ti |wea. 6.17 wEoNEsoAv, ssi>1'. ie, 1914. 8.5 V '11 __,-», .»L, u: Combs 1 in our stock. All our combs are well tlitiislied. Pocket, Fine, Dressing and Infant Combs. c -F@”¢@w Pew ioc»:‘=‘¢"‘°¢~.~i~i o~i:»; on F 1 19 9.51 20 10.45 DINRY OF EVENTS :it _ 11.37 --- 22 TO-DAY. 23 ("ity Magistratiis ('ourt. Prince Edward Theatre, and 25 15-07 pan. 26 ...L I 16.13 l’i-.opli-`s Tlteiitrc, 7.30 and it p.nt. 27 _ 17.25 (lolf. llelvidcri- Link:-r, '_’.~i:'i p.ttt. 28 . 18.41 Young llacltelors liiiitce, Stttallwood 29 19.40 all, 5 p. nt. 30 20-44 23.16 23.52 | 12.25 13.19 14.11 “FQFFFPWWFW ommoncmwomw w .-‘F -s ri. ra is EQ ,,,.,T.-;_2";='m SLP; i=‘°‘F&i="' -lm§"“` °\-t-do 'oicg Ia`o‘:i woe -hc -8 >- ... Q-1 J. G. Jamieson, DRUGGIST. \\\\\\ C . - 1 UI 94 \\'//III//I 5 Q lust Received 5 -- ntque designs in Io lt* ////IIII4\\\\\\\\'lII III/ G D 'Tj %4 0 . o H in 9.. !\\\\\?I///I II4\\\\\\ ewelry and Souvenir fP. E. l. consisting obs, Brooches, Charm II O nd Spoons, etc. ‘-- H Taylo Jewelct & Opttcian /I in ut of >'/I//l.\\\\\\VlIlJ§i.\i\\ BIRTHS “‘ ‘l l l l UNITED STATES AND GERMANY ,i The .\`i_-w York Times again reiurtts to the defence ot' its attitude in the pt't-si-iii crisis in the world's history, under the title of “The Truth About t_;1-riitaiiy." .~‘oiuc tit” thi- chief nten ot' the German Empire have put forth a '//5-\\\\\\\\\\\-f//I/llll "‘_""‘ that is pt~'l\‘ltlti-ii (tillis. ttf' tu-vi-itgt-'.’ \\'i- ltavi- knowledge of the fact, the proofs arc bet'ot'i- tis, yet Sl, lnilliri. I; _._;______...__.._._._ __ test- (li-rittatt ztilvocatcs talk to us as though we had just nt‘ri\'<-il front the ttiiioit. We are utttttovcd b_v their picture ol’ thc Slay peril. \\'hy is it tltat 1-rttttttt_v fears the Slay? ldttglattd is ttot al`raid. Friittci: has tio l`<.-at', Italy, GERMAN FLEET CRUISING Ili-lixiuttt, llollattd are all ttttilisturbed. \Ve should like to sei- at satisfactory |N THE BA'-Tlc NOW' :ttiswer to the qttcstiott wlty, when all the rest. of Europe is caltn. Gerntatty ____ .~‘l i`i (`ttl"l'l`\`ll.\&l~lN_ Sept, l_.'i.-\ (ii'l'- __ than iii-t-t iris iii--ii ct‘tti.~:itti; fiit' thi- liiirt. two iltiys in the wat.et's Hollf-lt of " the .\l:ittil l.s'ltinil.s_ ri<.‘cot‘tii thi- ltiili-otty of thi- il t‘:ttlii-ilrttl (`:ii'ilin:il Iii-i‘cict', l’t'itti;tt<- Ili-sides by itilicritanirc and It-aittiitg we give our syitipiitlty to those who re t`i;_;lttittg in thi- cnttsc of ltutnatt lihi_-ply, we wiihhnlil it from those who lic-ar the sytttltitls attd staudarils W0 Shi,-il our ltlood to cast out trout this lilllll- UUE l"‘f'<‘l'ill|\l‘¥`*~' I"l`USU’1\lf‘l\ l-ltetttsi-Ives in the dust bcf`oro_t.ltclr »\llllt"-1' itll' ll\¢’.\' S14 ll\“ll‘ fflill “D011 lite neck ot’ the Kitttz. \\’1- have no lik- ing t`or power that asks no satttztiott of [lm pp0pli>_ ,\|mr>¢;( ii ci-.ntury and halt' ago we ittadc an cud here of that iihomiiiiition bi-fore the Lord- ttt li-:ist we I'i-it it to he an altoniittat10n_.;m,| W.. nr.. nm ng,-,.,.,,t,ty imp,-05. ot' li--liriuttt :iitil .-\t'cltlii.-ltopot‘ .\lalini-s, _.W1 hy ],ih_e},),,.,m,,|,., impm-ml illvmution of divhw hwm. upon Mundy Cn, lil#-:'.-wil tt |>i'iii'i-ssiiitt ot liottflott lrislt- ttti-it :ind wittttcii, ttttit\lii_-riiei: titori- tltatt fll`t_v tlttittsatttil. \\'l|i-tt llti-f`:1riIltt:tl :itipc;ii'i-il itlt liti- bitlciiiiy lti- was l'ac<-il by tt iicttsi- criiwil. .~'tt'--tcltltif: front one 1-nil of tht- :t\'f‘tttti- in the other. ills app--:tt'~ attci- wa.-: thi-, .-iii.:nal for tin otitliitrst oi'_ i‘lt<-1-riiig, ivltich cotttiititt-il t'iit' .si-v--ral nilttuti-s. lit l.ondoii lic li-at‘ui-il that his sister anti Iltri_-i- tti-plwws wi-ri-` :tttttiitg tho 1-1-ftlgees from Ili-lgiuttt. AI thi- ottllittrst the t'nrditial was nrt-it-oiiti_~ witlt entotioit, and ti-ark rollctl dtttvli his cheeks, as ite stood with otttstretclti-d arms. 'I`lti- pt-iiccssloii occupied an ltottr in pzis.-iti/1. and when the first sci-tirin n et'pi~isi-.==. 'l'iii-se gi-iiili-tit(-it of (ii-rinittty plead in vain. We can t!i\'f‘ lllclll H0 hvlll- 'l‘o iinoti- thi-ir own words in ii truer si-ttse than their owtt, "thc coiiritry ot' (li-oi~_i:i» \\'iisltittgtiiii and Aliriiliatti Iiincoln places itself itpott the side Of rt just ciiiiiic and one worthy of lttttttatil ty's blessing." ‘i ;___ 0 _ _ notes ~,,., _. ..._ I J Some critics of the military situation are hinting their belief that Gen- ral Joffre was ttot rr-aily enouglt to help General I-‘ri-nch when the Gerntans l“"|""l ill" Fardlllnl ""m"'“"‘|"d SH” were ltitmtni-ring ltlni along the route front Mons to Paris. General Joffrc cncr-. 'l‘lton, raising his ltntid, he sltoittid: "God Save Ireland." _ 'l`lii,~i was the signal for a frcsli roar 'E ol' clit-ers, and tho crowd sltoutcd back: "God Save llclglum." .lit--r the procei-tsfoti passi-il Mr (i'('otnior read an address. signed by Mr ite-dtttotid. on behalf' of thi- Irish party, and Mr ()`f‘iinnor, on hi-linll' of thc Irish people. Tho address cx- presscd admiration nt Ilelgluttfs ile- teticc, mid sympathy for lJclglum's loss. ___ ____ “Moere dz Mcleod are introduc- ing n new feature in their Millinery Opening this year. Instead of sn Evening Display this great exhibit will he opened at 3 o’cloclc in-the in the end did si-.nil relief. l‘i-rhnps when the story ot' the French armies told it will ltr- understood why it was not sent sooner. Both British and French are conducting the annie kfttd of' it ntovemettl. nt the same time itttder like circuitistattccs. .Toffrc,' as well ns French, had the enemy Itani- rncrittg ltini, attd flic hammering may have been of n kind that did not per- tnit the object thereof to utti-nil to iittytliittx: else. Some United Stole.-1 newspapers nssert that through President Wilson Germany has made suggestions that inlgltt. if ni-cepteil by others cottcfrrneli, lead to the arrangement of peace ln Europe. There will be some doubt, un- tiie terms ot' the proposition are offically made public. The German war mtichine has been jurred and the inventors should know most about it and whether or not it can stand more of the same treatment. The Allies hard- ly looked for its going out of’ operation so soon, however. - Patriotism is of many kinds. Perh nps as notable as any la that of the prisoners ol' Molun jail, France, who ii ight sud--day are baking bread and making shoes for their countrymen, la ns have-.wlnlnltisoiloty refund to -w |“°m°°‘° money ordinarily allowed them for thslesiorh.-p-Ngo York ‘Worllf - ,~ . ~ , ,w _ . - ‘-"___“,i‘.~.t~-*-i»._- if --il p .M-~'f‘. hr; f : » .. ._f;.-.. _V 1--‘.1 gi. i- .- ».»i.»i at .~ -.\' "p,.».. --'- . -- ip- \ ._ f = .<,,- , __ , ._ .-1. -fi;-§!‘,i__»>_~ _t_ »,i', »,-,,~~ ~l.\» _J .1,. _ . pn. 1., ~~.v.c.,.. ..1~ -. "' * ~"f**" -'~=~ .w 1.. 'r *-yi, . =» ,i ’$“ 1-. ’=}- - ~- ~.- , - _- -~ .. ‘ '< ‘r -‘ .'t:»»'»'..,,.i.-I *. -' _.".-i'~il'*-f‘_1f,~-.'»;‘»;.=,» -f » "‘*-“»l" -. _f ;',~. ..-.-lr. ,f,_ v “_-.'t`» ;_.'1-ch -ti. '_---M*-', X1- " ?“ 1. .¢‘».~ 4' -“ fr . _ -M1* ‘ , Y -. _ - _ - _ _ ,~_»., . ~»»,'=~~ ' 1”-""` »='5‘ jf ' af ..-l-. ’ 1. ‘-‘j~.."” W-"r` T ," ","'. 1-'"x}1;”i`?‘T§tft_,"t;.qt3i‘_if -*‘» - .i~'tf,-f"=1, .ft »-.,.., . , t ,. ip __,,_...».-. V _.» . f . _._r_ ,_ -i~ ., ~ V __; _ if. . -. _ - .___ _ 0UR LONDON LETTER LONDON, Sept. 4.--Paris is once agzrindri the limelight and probably when these lines are read will be in it state ot siege. so that many people both I-‘reach and British. wilt have the unique experience ot’ having pass eil through two sleges by the same -irniy witltln their lifetime. l='1t the i`:i:`t that the i-.tpital oi' Frat J ha"- passed through so malty vl<~lssi‘u :is in history lnellnes us to the hope .ind bt-lie! flint its powers of r-as antici- nttrl ot' rapid recuperatloti will once more hc strikingly shown. 'l'!i-i (lov ernment already has rentovod to ls 'r- deaux. tliousatids of people t-.re 1'~»‘.l.i\i' ing or crossittg the channel, rite won- derful fortifications are being strength' cited, a .il in 'lie n.fantline thi. nuis- cr's t'urc<,-s are pushing t`rr‘~\.tt-t th- ugh nft -.ritlt Piiy ease an.l cr-rta-t ly ttot with as little to fear as it cv had iti the so-cuties, of wh-1 fs tltent on reucliiitg tlte tor- |‘~:tt'tt.» lrlativ rtintotni are abroad lit- - :ts to special surprises which tltc allies have in store. but as the press is tniite about reint'or-ffernents, it is ditiieolt to determine whether suclt runtors are well touttded. Europe already per- ceives that this war is going to be it prolonged one, hence a \'i<-tory here or there, an advantage gaittcd in one part of a. long line has to be viewed in relation to the wltole conflict. ’l‘lius- while the Germans seem to be obses- sed with the one idea oi taking Paris. there is every possibility that it check at tlte other ond of the board may re- sult itt check-mate for theitt. England is not, however, ntakiug the mistake ot’ lightly esteeittiiti.: the enemy. The first casttalty lists show- ing several tltousattds of our picked men dead on the field have doite more to stir public opinion than all the ad-, vertisittg for recruits, and throughout this week the recruiting stations in Loudon attd the Provinces have been so busy that many applicants have had to call again on the ttiorrow. As, however. it steady stream of recruits will pt‘olta|tly he required for some months, the Goverttniettt ltave decid- ed to open tt. campaign of public meet- ings at which the reasons for the war will he clearly oxpluitteil. So far as one can judge in Lottdott. there does not scent to be much 1tei~.e.-isity for this, the only ntalcoutettts being a few adlierettts ot` the Independent Labor Party. Ott the other ltattd, there are ott tho Parliattteittry Ilecrititittg (Toni- ntittee such well known labor leaili-rs as Mr. Arthur Henderson. t\I.l’.. and Mr. l<`rattk (loldstotte, ill. l’. Two iucidettts have served to bring hottie to I.ondotters the ltorrors of war this week, first the arrival of crowds of retltgteos front ilclgittttt, attd, secondly, -the return ot' woitttdeil. Large crowd sasseutbletl otltsirle \Vat- erloo and t'ltat'ittg Cross stations to see snntetltittg ot` the aiitbttlatici-. trains which brought so\'et‘al ituttdrcd wouttd- ed to our ltospitals. Some ol` the nit.-tt were able to tell their o:\'pcrit-itccs and though thi-_v atzrceil it ivas the ltottost warfare they had ever cxpct'icttccil. they were ntostly anxious to get back ittto action. Very patlietic too. was the arrival ot' large bodies ol' llelgian t'oi`ttgeos, people ot' all classes wlto have lost hottie, eniployniettt atid all they pos- sessed. A speclal t`und has been rais- ed to help tit;-.se people aswell as their cotttpatriots in Iielgitttn. Looking in one day this week at thc llelgiatt Lcgatiott, l i'ottttd that the war t'i-tugees conttnittee was in thc saitte building atid the director ot' the hos- pitality cottttttitteo was it clcr1:_\'iuati wltottt I had kttowtt several years ago as the principal ot' it large college in t‘itpe (‘olntty. Ili- is now t'ei-tot* ot' lltc parish in Soho win-r¢\, them is 10 pp fouttd at all titties a cottisiili-t'abli~ I-`ri-ttclt-spealciitg population. _-\ll day hc was roceiviitt.: aitd talking to dis tresscil wotitett and cltildri-tt, frotii sonic iit` whotu he had piliuble tales ifottfirntittiz only too atttply the stiirie.-1 of (lt-rttian bat'barlt_v. 'l`li<-re was im.. wotitau with a baby at the breast and another child \\'lio was playing with u_ ball, \vlto had .seen het' husband, it ctviliatt, shot in the streets ot' l)ittant, atid there was a little child with at scorclted taco who had just escaped frottt the burttittg ltonto in Lottvaitt wliero liotlt parcttts perlslted. 'l`ltr-.se people are bi-.itttz ltoused in a special rztlttgc tn \\'cstittinsti-.r, bitt tuatty ot` tltotit have to bi- provided for in every- lllilltlt lltlvilltl \'t‘I`.\’ tttengre clothing, no ntottoy attd naturally very little ability for oitt'ttitti: a living in a for- eign cottntry. So far as lilnglislt people arp Cm, ccrtted, the ilistriiss and povort_\' prob lent, though serious cnoitglt has not vet rc-aolted an acute stage. 'l`httt, ` is bound to como with the winter season, agaittst. wliiclt, ltowi-.vt-r, pretiarulimis are being ntade by the liocitl tlovi-.rn mt-nt Boitrd wltich cotittols the work- houses and other pitlilic cltarity or gtinl'/.utiotts. This I.lout‘d will have the ltattdliug of (`attada's gills ut' flour. cite(-se and coal, which will he dis- ti'iliut.i-.d later on througlt the atzeitcv of' lot-nl i-ottttitittitcs. The outs ilottitf oil by l’rinf‘.e Edward Isluttd and Al bi-rta will probably lie distributed by the War Otlice to the troops tor tor- age. I lk 1 During the past few months tio pitb- llc ttntn has been morect'it.lcizetlattd borne the britnt ot' ntatty attacks. than the lit. lion. ll. ll. Asflultlt, tho l‘t'ltitc Minister. llttlottlsts, Cottservntlvcs, extreme Iiadlcals and Labor people have worried liliti, and suf’t`rngct.tes tried to render his llt'e intollcrtible. Ilitt. all that was forgotten today (4th Sept., when in historic Guildhall he delivered one of the most impassioned appeals cvcr tnndc on behalf ol' the ttatiottal ltottor lti relation to the weak ami oppressed nations. Iti forcible language Mr. Asquith referred to the struggle between Might vs. Right, showing ltow the issue passed "out of the domain of argument" into that of national or itttcrttntiottal morals. Amid broatltlesii interest the Premier review- ed the events that led up to the war. the position ln which Great Britain rounil itself' when lt reached "a div- fdhig lint- which made or marred n nation worthy of the name, and in an ciorptr-tit perorntlon he cited Pitts Inst public utterance in that very hall: “l<]nglnnd has saved herself by her exertotis, and will us I trust, save Eur- ope by licr example." (IAEDMON. ::F'or the hot mid-day sun and the cool autumn nights, the best thing you can use for your complexion is MacKlnnon's Witch Hazel Cream. This in an excellent article which dons not contain an access of fats or oils. ls smooth to tho akin, is aromatic and leaves tho skin, soft and velvety fine. Sho. Mocklnriou Drug Co., Cartier drain., Birpetii. Mlm. .I r I » l Sllllllllii PllIlPH[l GERMANY IND ENGLAND BY ROBERT BLATCH FORD. The author of these articles is tha best-known leader of the English Socialists, and is one ot the founders ot the modern Socialist movement Great Britain. Under the nom de guerre of "Nunqusm" he wrote “Merrie England,”’ of which one and a half million copies have been sold. He is editor or the “Cla- riott,"’ which is by general consent the ablest and most influential of Socialist. journals; and he is master ot a style that for vigour and terse- ness has been surpassed by no Eng- lish writer since the days ot Cob- bett. The article was contributed to The Ill. London Daily Mall in 1908, six years ago. IX.--SOLDIERING OR SLAVERY AN ALTERNATIVE. Lycurgtts told the Greeks that “the best walls a city can have are walls of brave uten trained to arms." All the (lontlttetttal nations have put the idea ittto practice. But Britain, be- cause ot' her insular position, has neg- lected to follow suit. Now, Britain is tio longer an island in tlte military sense. Britain can be attacked by land-in France. But the British people, wlto never study foreign politics atid are iitdiffer- ettt to extraneous, historical and geo- graphical facts, preserve their tradi- tional depettdence on the Navy, attd their ingrained prejudice against cout- ptilsory military training. I, having been in the Army, have known for forty years the mental, moral, and physical advantages ot’ military training. but I have never gone out of ttty way to say so- for political reasons. I-lowever, of late years those political reasons have aeented to me less cogent, or less real, while ttiy conviction ltas deepened that universal tnilitary training would be the salvation of the Ilritisli race. For tttilltary traittittg, if condtti-ti-ii on reasottablc lines, in not a had thing, but a good thing for all _voting men. And I aitt sure, and most soldi- ers will agree with ine, that tio gyitt- nastics, nor atltit-tics, nor sports can replace it. Because titilitary training fnfuses a collective spirit. and an iti- structive dist-iplitte which catt be gaiueii in tio other way. I have receitlly attettded the Gor- tnau and the British Arttty tttattoeuv- ers; attd I have recetttly travelled a good deal in England and in (lt-rittaity A while ago I described in tltcse col- ttttttts the appearance of our troops iii ()xt'ordsltirc. and the tttarclt nt' the 10tlt Ittfatttry Brigade througlt Swin- don. Since then l have had occasloit to visit sonic ot' the workittg-class dis- tricts of Louilon, attd I have si-cu sottti-tltltii.: of the London poor. 'l‘he eottlrast liotwci-ti tlte young tnctt in Iiertttoitilsi-_\' ttitd the Borough and the _vottng soldiers wlto niarclted into Swindon tttade n di-ep itnpressiritt up- ott tue. The soldiers were ltcaltlty. ac- tive, merry; well fed, well waslted, properly disciplined, and as fit as fid- dies. The young men in the I.ondoti streets were none ot` those things. Yet the soldiers attd the others were ol' the same class; the same tuatt-t‘ial. I have seen costet' boys, tttill ltattds, town-bred ltolligatts, igttorattt. rottttd- shouldcred, pallid, tttiwashed, and tuot'ttll_v loose coitte into tt t'i-.glitt--iii; anil in six mouths they were elcnn, stttttrt, welI-cottdttcted, \\'ell-spiiticii, wrgll-built soldiers. l have seen the triattstbrttiatlott ef't'ectcd. l have inp- sell’ gone through the ittill. I ani cott- vitteed that the Army saved my life. I ani sure that it did mo more good than any other experience l have hail. 'l`lte tlerutau working classes are tttiirc Sober, more orderly, more in- telligent. than the llritislt. It is largely bei-itttso ltt their youth they have bi-en trained and tattgltt. and disciplined. Military trulttittg contpt-is cleanli- ness and order and good beltaviottr. lt gives ri youth at. the right time, and in the right way, good food, good clothing, ltealthy, open-alt' ext-t‘i~isc. provlili-s a course of physical culture. lt ettforces early rising, habits ot' dis- cipline, and regular hours ot' sleep. lt ltttpro\'cs the health and the pltysiqtte, and it sltarpetts the utlttd attd liri-eds a habit ol' sell'-reliuttce and ulerlitess. lint. it does very ntuch more than that. It trains tttcn in contradesltlp; it ittl`uscs what I call tlte collectivi- splrit. 'l`ltt- ili|l'i-rctti-c liet\v(-on an arttty attd a cro\\'il is ottortnotts: buf. its cltii-t' and tnost tnlualilo factor is that collcr.-tive spirit. A rcglntent is. very tnuclt itiore than it croivil of men all dressed in the sittin- utill`orm. lt is a rogltttettf, ll luis that which a mob never has: it collective ttilnil, it i:ol_lci-live soul. The ltitlt lnl`anlr_v Url!-llltle ls a very dlt`t`crt-tit thing t`rottt 11 "¥`0\\'fl of 35,000 .\'0\l1\.f: men in khaki: it is nn oririitiisitiz itll its units tttovc` “ml filfll Ulltl “Cl lttirctlti-r. It is not what so tttatiy civilians often call i|~ it tttacltlttii. :t tltttcltitti- has no soul: litit a brigade of soldiers has a soul. When it tttarc- hes all its ti,tl00 lciis move as one. \\-'lien it cltnrgcs all its buvoticls are itt line. \‘.'lteu it slugs it* has one urcut. thrlllltt_i.r voice. It is alive; it is ati_ orgnttlsttt; lt is the 10tlt Int'antry Ili-tgade. Let tho police attack a hugo crowd of undrilletl civilians and instinctively the crowd in-iitti-rs. The mi-ii do not know each otlii-r, cannot trust eaclt other. have never been taught to hold with each other. Ilut when the Arabs broke the square at Mci\'ell`s zrircbii the soldiers did tlte very opposite to what ri crowd of civilians would hii.\~e done; they did not scatter: they clos- ed: they did not run: they stood: iti- stlnctively they formed together hack to back ltt groups with their faces mid their bayonets tttriied lo their assail- ants. In camp and on the march, in fiction in 5' made and are very strong. They - 1 _-_ I 3 ._ l SIYC it clear steady, light, and , It __ ,_ giittherivitid nor rain can put them ` r‘- i '_: l_ sl ’ i - - ,, it-‘mm our own ¢°ri»e¢p<>n